An indirect clamping topology may be used to protect against the damaging effects of an electrostatic discharge event. An input node of a device is protected by a guard. The guard is driven by a signal from a unity-gain amplifier that flows through a resistance. The input node is clamped to the guard by a diode, and the guard is clamped to a low-impedance rail by another diode. The resistance of the low-impedance rail is less than that of the resistance through which the signal from the unity-gain amplifier flows, so that voltage resulting from the event flows to the low-impedance rail and not to the amplifier.
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1. A method of protecting a device from an electric surge using an indirect clamping topology, wherein the device includes an input node, the method comprising:
providing a first guard for the input node;
providing a second guard for inputs to a unity gain amplifier;
employing the unity gain amplifier to amplify a signal from the input node, wherein the amplified signal drives the first and second guards through a resistance, and wherein the resistance is higher than that of a low-impedance rail;
clamping the first and second guards to the low-impedance rail through at least one diode; and
clamping the input node to the first guard through at least one diode.
6. An indirect clamping topology to protect a device from an electric surge, wherein the device has at least one input node, the indirect clamping topology comprising:
a first guard connected to the input node;
a low-impedance rail;
a unity gain amplifier that receives a signal from the input node;
a second guard connected to inputs of the unity gain amplifier, the unity gain amplifier driving the first and second guards through a resistance, where the resistance is higher than that of the low-impedance rail;
at least one diode that clamps the first and second guards to the low-impedance rail; and
at least one diode that clamps the input node to the first guard.
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7. The indirect clamping topology according to
8. The indirect clamping topology according to
9. The indirect clamping topology according to
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The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/514,275, which was filed on Oct. 24, 2003, by Gordon L. Hamilton and Don McKinlay for “Methods and Systems for Electrostatic Discharge” and is hereby incorporated by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The disclosed methods and systems relate generally to electrostatic discharge protection, and more particularly to protecting a sensor input from electrostatic discharge.
2. Background Information
By design, or often as a secondary effect of semiconductor manufacturing technology, inputs of integrated circuits (“ICs”) may become highly conductive in the manner of a diode if the voltage on the input is below the most negative potential on the IC or above the most positive potential. This potential problem may be avoided by specifying that inputs must not be more than 0.3 volt (“V”) above the positive potential or more than 0.3 V below the negative potential. In most cases, no harm is done and, by specification it is often allowable to exceed these limits if the resulting current is limited to 10 milliamperes (“ma”) or less. Latch-up or damaging effects typically are likely in the 100 ma vicinity, although these levels are usually not published. The allowable current levels for amplifiers with very low bias currents may be less than these levels, but these allowable current levels have likely increased as technology improves. However, the ability of ICs to accept surge currents is typically very limited. Clamping the input signals with diodes to the supply voltages and inserting some resistance between the diode clamps and the device input may provide protection, but there are three critical issues: (i) the magnitude of the potentially damaging transient; (ii) the capability of the diode to carry this transient; and, (iii) the leakage of the diode and its impact on the circuit under normal operating conditions.
Some equipment for electrostatic discharge (“ESD”) provides impedances of 1500 ohms or 330 ohms. Accordingly, amperes of current will flow, though briefly, in these discharges. High conductivity diodes are available that may readily accept these discharge currents. However, even if described as “low leakage,” these leakages are likely to be orders of magnitude worse than the bias currents of ICs with low input currents, e.g., nanoamperes versus femtoamperes, or worse.
In an embodiment of the invention, there is provided a method of protecting a device with an input node from an electric surge using an indirect clamping topology. The method includes providing a guard for the input node. A unity gain amplifier is employed to amplify a signal from the input node, wherein the amplified signal drives the guard through a resistance. The resistance is higher than that of a low-impedance rail. The guard is clamped to the low-impedance rail through at least one diode. The input node is clamped to the guard through at least one diode. In a related embodiment, the device may be an instrument, such as a pH sensor.
In another related embodiment, the input node may be clamped to the guard through a pair of diodes connected in an anti-parallel configuration. In still another related embodiment, the low-impedance rail may include at least one zener diode connected to ground. In yet another related embodiment, the input node may be a high-impedance input node of the device.
In another embodiment of the invention, there is provided an indirect clamping topology to protect a device from an electric surge, wherein the device has at least one input node. The indirect clamping topology includes a guard, a low-impedance rail, a unity gain amplifier, and at least two diodes. The guard is connected to the input node. The unity gain amplifier receives a signal from the input node, and drives the guard through a resistance. The resistance is higher than that of the low-impedance rail. At least one diode clamps the guard to the low-impedance rail, and the other diode clamps the input node to the guard. In a related embodiment, the device may be an instrument, such as a pH sensor.
In another related embodiment, the topology may include at least three diodes. Two of the diodes may be arranged in an anti-parallel configuration, and may be used to clamp the input node to the guard. In yet another related embodiment, the low-impedance rail may include at least one zener diode connected to ground. In still another related embodiment, the input node of the device may be a high-impedance node.
The invention description below refers to the accompanying drawings, of which:
To provide an overall understanding, certain illustrative embodiments will now be described; however, it will be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art that the systems and methods described herein may be adapted and modified to provide systems and methods for other suitable applications and that other additions and modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the systems and methods described herein.
Unless otherwise specified, the illustrated embodiments may be understood as providing exemplary features of varying detail of certain embodiments, and therefore, unless otherwise specified, features, components, modules, and/or aspects of the illustrations may be otherwise combined, separated, interchanged, and/or rearranged without departing from the disclosed systems or methods. Additionally, the shapes and sizes of components are also exemplary and unless otherwise specified, may be altered without affecting the scope of the disclosed and exemplary systems or methods of the present disclosure.
In a pH sensor illustrative embodiment as in
The signal from the output 15 of the unity-gain amplifier 14 is also used to drive other circuit traces to serve as guards, such as a second circuit trace 21 that serves as a guard for the inputs of the unity-gain amplifier 14. The signal from the output 15 travels through node glass_buff 19 to the second circuit trace 21.
It is possible to protect the output 15 of the unity-gain amplifier 14 by clamping the signal from the output 15 that is used to drive the first circuit trace 11 and the second circuit trace 21 where that signal is exposed. This clamp is necessary because just placing resistance between the output 15 and the guards (i.e., the driven first circuit trace 11 and second circuit trace 21) may have a reduced funtional impact. In other words, while the resistance of a leakage path to the input node 10 may be high, such that the conductivity of that leakage path to the input node 10 may be considered to be low, it is not low enough to ignore. Thus, at least one protection diode 18 protects the second driven circuit trace 21 against the damaging effects of an ESD event or other electric surge event by clamping the second circuit trace 21 to a low-impedance rail 23, shown in
Similarly, the protection diodes 18 may also protect the first circuit trace 11 from any damaging effects of an ESD event or other electric surge event at that guard. In such an event, the protection diodes 18 clamp the first circuit trace 11, similar to the clamping provided to the second circuit trace 21, as described above. As in that case, the output 15 of the unity-gain amplifier 14, which drives the first circuit trace 11 through the node ph_glass_buff 20, is also protected. Thus, the impedance of the path from the first circuit trace 11 through the node ph_glass_buff 20 to the protection diodes 18 and on to the low-impedance rail 23 is less than the impedance of the path from the first circuit trace 11 through the node ph_glass_buff and through the buffering resistor 17 and the isolation resistor 16 to the output 15. As a result, any voltage produced by an ESD event or other event involving electric surge at the first circuit trace 11 will travel to the low-impedance rail 23 and not to the unity-gain amplifier 14.
Here, the protection diodes 18 may leak, but instead of affecting the input node 10 by allowing current flow into the high impedance input line, the protection diodes 18 are supplied by the signal from the output 15 that flows through the isolating resistor 16 and the buffering resistor 17, which prevent the surge from being driven back into the output 15. Because the diode leakage is comparatively low (e.g., nanoamperes), the offset voltage produced on the guard potential is the product of this leakage and the series resistance, or in this example, microvolts. This offset voltage can be considered negligible compared to other potentials on the printed wire assembly (PWA) and effects such as offset voltage in the amplifier then may affect the value of the guard potential.
The approach described above to protect the guards cannot be applied directly to a high impedance input itself, such as may be found at the input node 10. At such an input, the same leakage effect as describe above is multiplied by the impedance at the input of the unity-gain amplifier 14, which may produce unacceptable errors. However, the protection diodes 18 will have minimal current flow through them if there is virtually no voltage across them. In such high-impedance applications, the conduction “knee” of a diode is not the 0.6 to 0.7 volt threshold typically associated with conduction of diodes; the conduction that occurs at much lower voltages remains significant in that context. However, with less than around 100 mv across the diodes, the conduction there-through may be comparatively low, and may approach an undetectable amount.
To protect the input node 10 itself, at least one diode 12 is used to clamp the input node 10 to the driven first circuit trace 11 serving as a guard. In a preferred embodiment, at least two diodes 12 are used. The diodes 12 are in an anti-parallel configuration. In other words, the diodes 12 are placed in parallel such that the negative terminal of each diode 12 is connected to the positive terminal of the other diode 12. Further, a resistance, shown as a resistor 13, may be placed between the input node 10 and the input of the unity-gain amplifier 14 to protect those inputs from the damaging effects of an ESD event at the input node 10. Thus, the resistor 13 may protect the input of the amplifier 14 from as the isolating resistor 16 protects the output 15 of the unity-gain amplifier 14. In other words, the impedance of the path from the input node 10 through the diodes 12 to the driven first circuit trace 11 (and on to the low-impedance rail 23 as described above) is less than the impedance of the resistor 13, such that voltage from an ESD event at the input node 10 will flow to the low-impedance rail 23 and not to the input of the unity-gain amplifier 14.
The resistors described herein, which may limit and/or reduce the current driven into or pulled out of the sensitive integrated circuits, may already be present to limit the flow of energy into the sensor's environment that may, at least occasionally, be an explosive atmosphere.
Hamilton, Gordon L., McKinlay, Donald
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